First record from Europe of the Asian bamboo-feeding leafhopper Trifida bilobata Ohara, 2014 (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae: Typhlocybinae)
Author
Poggi, Francesco
Independent researcher, Via Madonnina 6 / B, I- 23873 Missaglia LC, Italy
Author
Sanna, Francesco
Department of Agronomy, Food, Natural Resources, Animals and Environment (DAFNAE), University of Padua, Italy
Author
Casiraghi, Alice
Department of Arthropods, Natural Sciences Museum of Barcelona, Spain
Author
Šćiban, Marko
Association for Sustainable Development and Conservation of Natural Habitats of Serbia - HabiProt, Novi Sad, Serbia
Author
Kunz, Gernot
Karl-Franzens-University of Graz, Universitätsplatz 2, Department of Biology (Zoology), Graz, Austria
text
Zootaxa
2024
2024-04-04
5433
1
144
150
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5433.1.7
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5433.1.7
1175-5326
10953739
49A96419-45D7-4224-A1C2-CE9A86A9DF1F
Trifida bilobata
Ohara, 2014
Distribution
. Europe (
Spain
,
Switzerland
,
Italy
,
Austria
, and
Serbia
);
Japan
.
Material examined.
3 ♂♂
,
8 ♀♀
, 1 nymph,
Italy
,
Lombardia
, prov.
Lecco
,
Maresso
,
263 m
,
45.689722
,
9.359167
, from
Phyllostachys aurea
,
9.X.2022
and
30.X.2022
,
F.Poggi
leg. (
CFP
)
.
7 ♂♂
,
2 ♀♀
, 1nymph,
Italy
,
Lombardia
,prov.
Brescia
,
Rovato
,
225 m
,
45.592444
,
10.004306
, from
Phyllostachys
sp.
,
7.X.2022
,
F. Sanna
leg. (
CFP
)
.
8 ♂♂
,
8 ♀♀
, 2 nymph,
Italy
,
Veneto
, prov.
Verona
,
Bovolone
,
23 m
,
45.275236
,
11.142317
, from
Phyllostachys
sp.
,
8.X.2022
,
F. Sanna
leg. (
CFP
)
.
1 ♂
,
6 ♀♀
,
Italy
,
Sicily
, prov.
Palermo
,
Palermo Botanical Garden
,
12 m
,
38.112988
,
13.374043
, from
Bambusoideae
indet.,
15.VI.2023
,
F. Sanna
leg. (
CFS
)
.
1 ♂
,
1 ♀
,
Switzerland
,
Canton Ticino
,
Casoro
,
276 m
,
45.953242
,
8.904661
, from
Bambusoideae
indet.,
14.VI.2017
,
G. Kunz
leg. (
CGK
)
.
2 ♂♂
,
3 ♀♀
,
Austria
,
Styria
,
Graz
,
439 m
,
47.049246
,
15.489062
, from
Bambusoideae
indet.,
29.IX.2021
,
G. Kunz
leg. (
CGK
)
.
4 ♂♂
,
10 ♀♀
, 2 nymphs,
Spain
,
Valencian Community
, prov.
Valencia
,
Valencia
Botanical Garden,
15 m
,
39.477323
,
-0.385914
, from
Bambusa multiplex
,
Bambusa ventricosa
,
Fargesia nitida
,
Phyllostachys sulphurea
,
Pleioblastus argenteostriatus
, and
Pleioblastus linearis
.
22.X.2023
and
2.XII.2023
, A. Casiraghi leg. (
CFP
).
3 ♂♂
, 1 nymph,
Serbia
,
Belgrade
,
78 m
,
44.826940
,
20.452037
, from
Phyllostachys
sp.
,
22.X.2023
,
M. Šćiban
leg. (
CMS
)
.
1 ♂
,
3 ♀♀
,
Serbia
,
Novi Sad
,
77 m
,
45.232679
,
19.825476
, from
Phyllostachys
sp.
,
19.XI.2023
,
M. Šćiban
leg. (
CMS
)
.
FIGURE 1.
(Photos by G. Kunz)
Trifida bilobata
(specimens from Switzerland, Canton Ticino). A–B. male; C–D. female; E–J. panoramic stack of male genitalia (E. style; F–J. aedeagus, multiple views as per arrows; for size scale see Fig. 2); K. right forewing of male.
FIGURE 2.
(Drawings by F. Poggi)
Trifida bilobata
(male from Italy, Veneto). A. aedeagus and connective, lateral view; B. aedeagus and connective, ventral view; C. left style, dorsal view; D. left subgenital plate, ventral view; E. pygofer, left lateral view; F. left anal tube process, lateral view.
FIGURE 3.
(Photo by F. Sanna) Leaf damage on
Phyllostachys
sp.
(Bambusoideae), due to trophic activity of
Trifida bilobata
in the mesophyll (Italy, Veneto).
Morphology. Adult
(
Figs 1A–D
) body length
2.6–2.9 mm
in males and
2.9–3.2 mm
in females; body almost uniformly colored, pale to vivid yellow in males and creamy white to pale yellow in females; forewings semitransparent, with black spot near apex of clavus and edge of 3
rd
apical cell darkened (
Fig.1K
); head triangular, blunt apically, as wide as pronotum, vertex produced anteriorly, slightly longer in female; male abdominal sternal apodemes extending beyond the posterior margin of 4
th
sternite; female 7
th
abdominal sternite quadrilateral, with posterior margin produced.
Male genitalia
; Pygofer strongly concave caudally, with dorsocaudal part finger-like (
Fig. 2E
); subgenital plate triangular, with angulate lateral margin, bearing few marginal setae (
Fig. 2D
); style elongate, with distinct preapical lobe, widened apically, with apical margin concave near middle (
Figs 1E
,
2C
); connective fused with the aedeagus, with arm expanded and long (
Fig. 2B
); aedeagus (
Figs 1F–J
,
2A–B
) with shaft bifurcated basally, giving rise to two gonoducts and two gonopores, with a dorsal apodeme elongate, extending caudally, strongly curved cephalad in apical 1/3 and slightly forked at apex, narrowed at apical 1/
3 in
ventral view; shaft broad, gradually curved dorsad, slightly narrowed near middle and rounded apically in lateral view, bearing two apical processes slender, extending inward and cephalad; gonopore apical on caudal surface; anal tube long, with large bilobate processes basally (
Fig. 2F
), caudal part of process darkened, slender and tapering, extending ventrally.
Host plants and life cycle.
T. bilobata
is a bamboo-feeding leafhopper. In
Japan
(Kyushu), it was collected from
Phyllostachys edulis
(Carrière) J.Houz
,
Phyllostachys reticulata
(Rupr.) K.Koch
, and
Pleioblastus
sp.
of Bambusoideae (Ohara, personal communication). In Europe, it was collected from
Phyllostachys aurea
Carrière
in northern
Italy
, from
Phyllostachys
sp.
in northern
Italy
and
Serbia
, from
Bambusa multiplex
(Lour.) Raeusch.
,
Bambusa ventricosa
McClure
,
Fargesia nitida
(Mitford) Keng
,
Phyllostachys sulphurea
(Carrière) Rivière & C.Rivière
,
Pleioblastus argenteostriatus
(Regel) Nakai
, and
Pleioblastus linearis
(Hack.) Nakai
in Spain, and from Bambusoideae indet. in
Austria
,
Switzerland
and Sicily.
There are no published data on the life cycle of this species. We found adults of both sexes in June, October, November, and December and 5
th
instar nymphs in October and December, together with the adults. Based on these data and since the species of Typhlocybinae typically overwinter as eggs or as adult females, we can infer that there might be at least two generations per year.